Key Highlights
- AMAT shares declined 2.9% to $404.86 Monday, even after surpassing Q1 earnings projections
- Rising US-China AI friction grew after Beijing blocked Meta’s $2B deal for AI firm Manus
- Washington accused Beijing of mass theft of American AI intellectual property
- US-Israel-Iran geopolitical risks created additional supply chain worries
- AMAT maintains a 50.2% gain year-to-date, hovering near its $417.04 peak
Applied Materials (AMAT) experienced a 2.9% decline on Monday, closing at $404.86, as escalating geopolitical friction between Washington and Beijing over artificial intelligence technology overshadowed the company’s strong quarterly performance.
The pullback occurred even as AMAT delivered impressive first-quarter results. The semiconductor equipment manufacturer reported earnings of $2.38 per share, exceeding analyst projections of $2.21. Total revenue reached $7.01 billion, surpassing the $6.88 billion consensus forecast.
The stock’s weakness stemmed not from corporate performance issues but from broader geopolitical developments.
Beijing mandated that Meta reverse its $2 billion purchase of artificial intelligence startup Manus, invoking national security justifications. This action represented an increasingly aggressive stance from Chinese authorities regarding foreign involvement in domestic technology enterprises.
Washington fired back, with the White House alleging that China has been appropriating American AI innovations on an “industrial scale” while promising enhanced enforcement measures ahead. Such inflammatory language typically creates uncertainty among investors in the semiconductor equipment industry — a sector positioned directly in the crosshairs of US-China technological rivalry.
Concurrently, persistent supply chain challenges connected to the US-Israel-Iran geopolitical situation contributed additional downward pressure. Elevated raw material expenses and potential manufacturing interruptions dampened investor confidence throughout technology hardware companies.
AMAT has experienced 21 price swings exceeding 5% in the last twelve months, placing Monday’s movement within its established volatility parameters. Investors appear to view this development as newsworthy but not fundamentally transformative to the company’s trajectory.
Wall Street Maintains Bullish Stance
Analyst confidence remains intact. Following AMAT’s February Q1 report, KeyCorp, Barclays, and TD Cowen each elevated their price targets to $450. Needham established a $440 objective. Zacks Research upgraded the equity to Strong Buy status.
The prevailing Street consensus registers as Moderate Buy, comprising 27 Buy recommendations and 6 Hold ratings. The mean price target stands at $368.29 — notably below current trading levels.
Looking toward Q2, AMAT has provided earnings guidance ranging from $2.44 to $2.84 per share. The analyst community forecasts full-year earnings of $11.10 per share.
Management also increased the quarterly dividend payment to $0.53 from $0.46 — translating to an annual rate of $2.12 and yielding approximately 0.5%. The upcoming distribution is set for June 11.
Large Funds Expand Positions
Institutional shareholders now control 80.56% of outstanding shares. Vanguard expanded its holdings during the fourth quarter, while Capital Research Global Investors dramatically increased its position by nearly 120%. Both Morgan Stanley and Ameriprise Financial similarly grew their stakes.
Regarding insider transactions, CAO Adam Sanders and Director Judy Bruner divested shares totaling approximately $4.48 million last quarter. Company insiders maintain collective ownership of 0.30%.
Three days prior to Monday’s selloff, AMAT surged 3.7% following encouraging Intel earnings that energized the wider semiconductor sector. Intel disclosed 22% expansion in its data center operations, triggering gains across AMD, Qualcomm, and ARM.
AMAT has climbed 50.2% during 2026 and recently touched a 52-week peak of $417.04.



